Wishlist

The Wishlist

Note that the following are not intended to be prompts, but rather examples of the sorts of things, tonally and formally, we’d like to see in our submissions. Of course, the best way to figure out what we’re looking for is to check out the magazine.

Please feel free to share our Wishlist with your friends, teachers, family, workshop classmates, football team members, co-workers, and pets. Just make sure you attribute it to Artifice Magazine.

A treasure map

A story in musical notation

1 thing you might throw at a window, wrapped around a brick

Something that includes a Greek chorus

A timebomb, ticking or otherwise

5 photos with captions

3 pieces that will stump our graphic designer

The contents of a specialists’ drawer

24 want ads

2 redactions

A narrative in the form of a maze

A maze in the form of a narrative

An assortment of graphs

1 flowchart

A series of sticky notes (we won’t limit you to Post-Its)

4 poems that use clipart/small pictures as punctuation

5 poems or stories in the form of equations

3 poems created by elliding words from Project Gutenburg, Wikipedia, US Weekly or People Magazine quotations (ellided words should be included, but struck through or x’d out)

1 poem cycle in which each poem in the cycle uses a different form

1 concrete poem

1 Literary/Horror/Western/Conspiracy story (that is, a story that’s all four at once)

3 poems created from tabloid articles via the cut-up method

4 labyrinths created using parentheses, footnotes, endnotes, etc

3 comics (.pdf format, please)

5 stories that involve pictures, not as illustrations, but as an integral part of the stories themselves

7 diagrams of horrible machines

3 stories or poems in the form of rules to an imaginary game

2 poems based in whole or in part on Akira Kurosawa movies

1 poem meant to be included in an errata

20-30 (at least!) drawings for a corner-of-the-magazine flipbook (Submit as .pdf; on acceptance, high res images will be needed)

1 book review collaboration between the reviewer and the reviewed

1 piece, any form, called “A Basic Guide to Science”

2 stories or poems that involve folding or cutting the paper on which they are printed

2 stories that require active reader participation

1 story in the form of a multiple-choice personality inventory, such as the MMPI